The Internet is an excellent resource for helping you
better understand what you are reading in a book.
These hunts explore:
settings, characters, author's lives, and other ideas related to the book
being studied.
Users will also gain experience harnessing the Internet
for research.

Goldilocks Web tip: You can easily adjust your view of the text on a page. If you think the words are too small: Safari - Go: View .. Make Text bigger or Mac - hold down the command key and press the + key (plus sign) or Windows use Ctrl & + key. Firefox - Go: View .. Text Size. Conversely, if you think it is too big do the same, but choose smaller or Mac .. - (minus sign) or Windows: Ctrl .. - minus sign key. Look for this feature on other browsers so you can make your view .. just right!

"There was a time in American schools when knowledge came
almost exclusively from textbook and teachers. From them, students learned
what they needed to know to get jobs in the factories and workplaces of the
industrial age. That time has passed. There's been an explosion of information
in the world, more information than anyone could help to learn in a lifetime,
more than a teacher can teach, so now students need to know where to find
that information, how to access it, and how to use it." Michael Lemonick

Save a tree - use a Digital Answer Format - Highlight the text. Copy it. Paste it in a word processing document. Save the document in your folder. Answer on the wp document in an easily read, contrasting color (not yellow) or font. (avoid fancy fonts like: Symbols, , .) Save regularly as you work. Submit your works as an email attachment or avia an electronic class drop box. Or perhaps you have the resources to record verbal answers. If you do, be sure to first read / record the question. Then record the answer immediately after it.